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tv   FOX Friends  FOX News  October 23, 2018 3:00am-6:00am PDT

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toast intolerant. rob: finally the ugly. don't dress up your pet chicken for halloween. cdc warning taking chickens against trick or treating because of salmonella. can you get the infection by handling live birds. if you do, this don't do it. jillian: you have been warned. have a great day. rob: so weird. >> this will be the election of the caravan, kavanaugh, law and order, tax cuts, and common sense. >> democrats hope for a blue wave appear to be fading. >> we always knew this election was going to be close. >> a lot of people talk about this blue wave and all this stuff. i don't believe it? >> there are reports that cia director gina haspel is traveling to turkey during international outcry. >> jenna haspel will be there to see the evidence and examine turkish officials. >> admitted if elected speaker she is planning to use subpoena powers as a
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bargaining chip against the president. >> interesting in terms of negotiating on other subjects. >> if you want the fake news to finally investigate hillary clinton, we will just have to nominate hillary clinton to the united states supreme court. how do you like that? can you imagine hillary up there? that would take three to four years of questions. ♪ free ride ♪ in the fast lane ♪ brian: did someone buy the whole montgomery jengt tri genty album? that was yesterday's opening. steve: we are live up here on the mezzanine level of studio f. ainsley: good morning to you happy tuesday. next tuesday is halloween. halder to believe. steve: and two weeks from today it's the midterm elections. although early voting has started in a number of states. including texas. brian: for me, it's a
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countdown until halloween is over. i'm so against that holiday. [buzzer] ainsley: scary and evil spirits? brian: one of those holidays i thought it would go away it's not. steve: like the lottery. you hate the lottery. what i like about halloween now. my kids don't trick or treat. kids come over. brian: i love to see kids dressed up as kids. steve: they do that every day. ainsley: we always like it the next day. everyone who works here brings in half of their kid's candy and placed around the halls and on desks. brian: three weeks later we go to the dentist and we have cav tees. steve: wawah, wah get off my lawn. early landfill voting has started in the state of texas. houston is smashing early voting records. the president of the united states was there in the toyota centers last night. man o man he was on fire.
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you saw it here on fox. one of the things he unveiled is that 10% middle class tax cut. didn't have a lot of details. of course, congress is not in session. but that's one of the things he was talking about last night. ainsley: it was a packed house. 18,000 people there he walked out on the stage and ted cruz stepped aside. it's the president of the united states and they were all so excited to be there. ted and i are good friends now. hwe had a nasty rivally. brian: why does people find this hard to believe. briewfingts at it fight each other for 12 or 15 rounds. they used to do 15. at the end they hug. now it's the hug. let's listen to ted and little don. >> it's true what they say everything in texas is just bigger. the people of texas are going to reelect a man who has become a really good friend of mine. you know, we had our little difficulties, right?
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will be the election of the caravan, kavanaugh, law, tax cuts and common sense. today's democrat party would rather protect criminal aliens than american citizens, which is why the democrats must be voted out of office. the democrats want to replace freedom with socialism. [crowd boos] >> they want to replace the rule of law with the rule of the mob. democrats produce mobs. republicans produce jobs. in this election, you can send a message to the
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radical democrats, don't mess with texas. brian: right. texas ted now. steve: beautiful ted. ainsley: beautiful wall and beautiful ted. brian: he went after the rock star on the left beto o'rourke. who has a lot of charisma and presence. he calls him overrated o'rourke. steve: some call phoney. ainsley: beto is not his real name. robert is his real name. what kind of guy would use beto. socialist as far as healthcare is concerned. he wants to take away your guns. steve: one of the things ted cruz predicted in 2020. donald trump will be overwhelmingly reelected president of the united states. brian: i think ted cruz actually the president approached him do you want to be a supreme court justice, do you want to be a contender? no, i'm pretty happy now. steve: also in texas, the president said he thought the caravan could have been paid for by democrats he said had something to do with it now it was a big
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mistake. ain't ainmistake. ainsley: yeah. that caravan growing to a mile long as it's medal straight up to our border. brian: we have about 1,000 miles to go until we get here. u.s. agents already dealing with criminals knowingly breaking the law. i say knowingly because it was in bold. steve: griff jenkins is live in mccallum, texas where he saw those border busts first hand. >> caravan 7,00 7,000 strong headed this way. 11,000 miles dew south of mcallen. they haven't said where they are going to go. this would be the shortest route. that's why so many hondurans, agusta mall alans and el salvadorians come here. they come illegally. yesterday we laid in the bushes in wait and busted one of those smuggling operations. watch. >> we are out here in the bushes waiting to witness
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one of these crossings. they are coming right now. you can see they have a family in a raft. excuse me, sir, were you trying to cross into america illegally? so what we are witnessing now is clearly a family that was being brought over by that smuggler that was paddling in the raft. this is an attempt to illegally cross. and they have gone back over there. we seemed to have foiled this attempt. officials tell us he is probably just going to look for another spot. you know it's illegal crossing. >> yes. >> but you came anyway? >> why? >> why did you come is why i'm asking you [inaudible] >> can you tell me why you came illegally? >> [inaudible] from you honduras? >> what are the conditions
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there. >> you cannot have work there. the criminals always will -- get your money. griff: but they are not all women and children. in the last 48 hours a man wanted for murder in south carolina was arrested here along with another member of the 18th street violent gang. guys? brian: what a story. allow refugees into the country. they have to be in order and a method and practice to practice. you can't just have random people coming across. but way to highlight the human aspect. >> as griff was saying there are a mixture in the group. there are moms and kids and criminals. there have been arrests. deportees who used to live here in the group. some of them are interviewed by. one guy spent his table years in california. grew up there. visa expired 14 years ago.
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said it's time for me to go back to the united states a country i can live my life unlike guatemala. he in the group trying to get back in. steve: "the washington post" has a lot of people in the caravan have been deported many times from the united states. most of them talk to the post left not of their own volition but halle hauled out. fuentas was deported six times. keeps coming back for jobs. because is he able to go through the border. the post talked to some people. some will apply for asylum. most of the migrants are not planning to plan for asylum. they hope to slip across the border illegally. the vast majority of the caravan not applying for refugee status in mexico. they are worried they would be detained or deported. mexico said can you proceed. you can stay here in mexico but got to apply. migrants don't want to they are afraid if they are on
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the registry they will send them back home. when they come to our border they will not stop at the border crossing. ainsley: it's emler fuentas 29 years old. deported six times. they catch you and you try go back and do it all over again. another guy said when i heard about the caravan i knew it was my chance. brian: i don't know how this is going to play out. 1,000 guy people coming up. and then our guys on the border. man, this could be ugly. talk about the midterms. for the longest time seems like ugly jest for the midterms. party in power usually always take as she lacking. almost nobody, including the democrats are calling for a blue wave. watch. >> we always knew this election was going to be close. i don't use the term blue wave. i always talk about the need for the blocking and tackling. >> i don't think the democratic advantage. >> i know a lot of people talk about blue wave and all this stuff. i don't believe it i happen
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to think on election night you will find a very, very close situation and maybe a handful of votes determining whether democrats gain control of the house and we have an entity able to stand up to trump or we don't. ainsley: nancy pelosi was listening to that. she is calling it a blue democratic tsunami. even bigger than a wave. brian: she is guaranteed she is going to be speaker if that works out for her. a lot of early voting data analyzed from seven close states. as it turns out republican voters are outpacing democratic voters in most of them. in arizona, in florida, in georgia, in indiana, montana tennessee and texas. republicans are outvoting the democrats in early voting. only in nevada where democratic voters exceeded republican voters in the early voting. and, of course, key senate races in six of those or rather in seven of those eight states. ainsley: that blue wave is
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turning purple. the president said at the rally if any of you haven't voted because have you early voting in texas, get up right now. brian: i know the president was pumped in that rally. twitter feed seeing shots of the line growing. tweeting this out. hey, texas, i'm coming. thanks so much for waiting. they were waiting for 24 hours and big crowd out there. ainsley: wink rally this week. charlotte, north carolina rally this week and illinois rally. steve: busy, busy. speaking of midterms, democrats have to figure out some sort of an answer to this message. see this caravan coming towards us, that's because democrats will not work with republicans in fixing our immigration status. the democrats haven't said anything about that. the top ones, because they want to remain focused, laser like on healthcare. that's what they think is a winning issue. at the same time, you see those thousands of people heading our way. what are the democrats going to say? brian: do you remember when the oil was leaking in texas and both republicans and democrats were calling on barack obama to do
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something? i thought we would rally around to stop this caravan on democrats and republicans the same way. i just don't see how it is in our national interest to allow 7,000 people to storm our border. why would anybody be high fiving that situation. ainsley: it's a lose, lose for democrats. if they talk about it stats and polls have showed don't mention open borders and talk about it not a favorable thing for democrats or your voters. at the same time if they say then they don't want them in, then they are accused of wanting to separate families and all of that it's lose, lose for them. steve: meanwhile a republican, florida governor rick scott is hoping to flight the senate seat down in florida. he has two weeks left to do it. how is he feeling? ainsley is going to talk to the governor next. ainsley: what do the voters think of president trump's rally last night. pete hegseth is having breakfast with friends at the house of pies in houston. steve: early for pie. ♪ hey, baby if♪ i'm a countryman
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♪ ainsley: with just two weeks until the midterms, it is a tight, tight race down in the state of florida. the latest real clear politics average, an average of all the polls, now has democratic senator bill nelson ahead of the g.o.p. governor rick scott by just 3 points. so essentially neck in heck. governor rick scott joins us now. good morning, governor. thank you for being with us. >> good morning, ainsley. i'm heading back out to
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three impacted counties in the panhandle today. we still have 60,000 people without power. this hurricane was like a gigantic tornadoes with 14-foot storm surge. just disseminated our panhandle. so, right now i'm continuing to try to help people get their power back. get their cell phone service back. make sure they help rebuild their houses. we have got over 70,000 people have already signed up for fema and we are trying to work with organized state, federal and local resources to make sure keep helping these families. ainsley: what's your mind set when it comes to helping hurricane families. you have bill nelson go out and campaign right now. while you are governor you have to be on the ground helping those families. dolldoes he have an advantage. >> the way i think about it i grew up in a very poor family in the midwest. i remember my mom, a single mom, what would she want if this happened where she was living, if a tornado came through and that's what i
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think about. i think about all those families. so i wanted to make sure they have food and water, a tarp to, you know, cover their house. they get fema benefits. they get back to work. get their companies open. that's what i think about. my opponent is just fascinating. he did a couple photo ops. there is nothing can i do. if you need me, give me a call. it's fema. it's a federal response organization. he could be helpful with that. he could be helpful with tyndall. tyndall was disseminated. that's probably over 20,000 jobs, 11,000 people working on tyndall, all those families, he just turns his back to them says oh, i'm not worry about you. bill nelson is worried about one person's job, his job. so i'm going to keep doing. this my wife is on the campaign trail. not something she he wanted to do. i told her i wanted to run for governor 8 years ago. she said that's great. i'm scared of giving public speeches.
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but that's what she is doing every day now. i feel sorry for her. ainsley: let's talk about. so issues. you are behind in the polls just by 3 points. bill nelson, his main drivers of his lead apparently are women, blacks, hispanics, independent voters. what do you say to that group of individuals? >> sure. you know, the -- we will win for this reason. it's going to be who cares about you. it's going to be do you want to elect somebody like senator nelson been in office 42 years and done nothing and elect somebody like rick scott who will show up and do his job? do you care about a job? we have added 1.6 million jobs since i got elected. care about education record education funding. care about the environment. record environmental funding. senator bill nelson has done nothing for the environment other than run an ad. ainsley: congratulations on the job gains. we were reporting on different states yours this september compared to last
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september 407,000 gains. 1.6 since have yo1.6 since you n office. where can people get more information about you. >> go to scott for florida.com. we will get everybody out to vote. ainsley: governor, we have got to go. thank you so much. we did invite senator bill nelson and he declined. so a tree falls on your brand new car and totals it.
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i'm ready to crush ap english. i'm ready to do what no one on my block has done before. forget that. what no one in the world has done before. all i need access, tools, connections. high-speed connections. is the world ready for me? through internet essentials, comcast has connected more than six-million low-income people to low-cost, high-speed internet at home. i'm trying to do some homework here. so they're ready for anything. jillian: good morning, back with a fox news alert. panic at the university of utah overnight after a student is shot and killed on campus. the university going on lockdown as police search the massive campus for the shooter. the suspect, melvin roll land found dead after shooting himself inside a church off campus. police believe roll land, a registered sex offender was the victim's ex-boyfriend. he was not a student at the
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university. another story breaking right now. turkish president erdogan parading the saudis for admitting jamal choosh's death but demanding action. >> and now our expectation from them going forward is that all those responsible from the highest degree, highest level to the lowest level will be highlighted, will be brought to justice. jillian: in a speech to the turkish parliament moments ago, erdogan vowed a village lengths investigation of what he called a savage murder. they are looking into possible local co-spirits. cia director gina haspel has reportedly flown to turkey as the u.s. seeks its own answers. the kremlin has announced it decision to pull out of the nuclear arms committee. john bolton is in moscow right now. in few hours i will meet with russian president vladimir putin. former president ronald reagan and soviet president gorbachev signed the int
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treaty in 1987 stopping the u.s. and russia from building nuclear cruise missiles. steve: to help combat the abuse and misuse of opioids. the dea national prescription take back day. dispose of unused, expired or unwanted prescription drugs. now in its ninth year this take back day has already helped remove 9.9 million pounds of medications from circulation. since the cdc estimates it's 70,000 people in the united states died from drug overdoses last year. joining us right now, just days ahead of the next take back day is acting administrator of the dea mr. dillon. good morning to you. why do we need take back day. >> we need national drug take back day. important to clean out our medicine cabinets of unused unwanted and expired prescription drugs. that's one of the ways america has become addicted to drugs, the drugs in their
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medicine cabinet. started take back day to get the drugs out of medicine cabinets. take them to collection facilities and securely and safely disposed of. steve: you bring up where they can be safely disposed of. a lot of people think flush those down the toilet. next thing you know that's in our water that. >> pollutes the water supply. one of the reasons we started the national drug take back day. steve: one of the other reasons this is important is just the fact that when people have drugs left in their cabinet. you know, they might think you know, i had a little operation. i might need that vicodin some day in the future they never get around to it somebody goes poking around, next thing you know they are doing something with your vicodin. >> family members, friends who have access to medicine cabinet. home. could take those drugs and could become addicted to those pain killers. that he was within one of the reasons we are facing the opioid crisis we are today. steve: all right. so you have a couple of good reasons why people should
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take part. how do we figure out where to take the drugs to? >> dea take back.com. you will find locations all across the country. we have over 5,000 collection sites around the country with over 4,000 state and local law enforcement agencies assisting us at those collect sites. you will find a clection site near you. steve: when you do that people say can i keep the little jar so they don't know my name? what i was taking? >> it's completely anonymous. the answer is yes you can keep the jar. place the medication he is into a bag. whatever makes you comfortable. if you give us the entire package, also, it's totally anonymous. the goal here is just to collect the medications and to destroy them in a safe and secure way. steve: you have one in the spring. the one for the fall is coming up very shortly. why do you do it twice a year? >> well, we found that twice a year is necessary. in the spring, we took in over 900,000 pounds of medications. it's been growing every single year. so, this saturday, october 27th from 10 to 2 we
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are hoping to at least match the amount we received in the spring. steve: one of the things, there is such, you know, so many people are talking about opioids these days. and people don't realize i have got those in my medicine shelf. it's time to get rid of them. >> absolutely time to get rid of them. if you don't need them. don't want them. they are expired no reason to keep them. go to dea take back.com to find out the location near you. steve: or you can call 800-882-9539. uttam dhillon acting doppler radar indicated of the dea. thank you for joining us live. >> okay. steve: so important to do, folks. 70,000 people in the united states died of overdoses last year. you don't need the pills anymore, if you are not using them, go ahead and take them back. >> thank you. steve: the video is
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terrifying. a man smashing the front door, then breaking into our fox affiliate in washington, d.c. u i used to work in that building. what we have learned about him coming up live next. plus, pete hegseth is having breakfast with friends in texas after president trump's rally. pete is at the pie palace. hey, pete. pete: that's right, steve. never too early for pie. curvey drive in houston. if you are in houston come tout house of pies. we are talking to folks all morning long. last night i was outside the trump rally. overflow where the houston rockets play. talking to people why they waited so long to see this president why they love him more today than they did on elections day. we will bring that answer to you on the other side. i'm going to eat pie. ♪ - [narrator] the typical vacuum head has its limitations,
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>> business is now good. they are coming back. jobs are coming back. plants and factories are coming back like never before. they are all coming back. this is for middle income people. all middle income people big tax cut. 10%. we will be putting it in next week. steve: we have heard it was coming. last night the president gave a preview. a 10% middle class tax cut announced just two weeks and one day before the midterms. brian: i think it might have taken the speaker by surprise. i'm not too sure congress knew about it. steve: not a lot of people involved. ainsley: 18,000 people at that rally. only included the people inside. live music, carts food outside lots of people watching on the big screens. pete hegseth got on a plane. he wanted to go to houston. is he talking to folks it at the house of pies. what did they think of the rally last night? >night? pete: well, a lot of folks, if they weren't able to get in, they watched it on tv. it's true. they say that everything is
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bigger than texas. and i can confirm last night when we were inside that arena where the houston rockets normally play, it was packed with red hats and thousands of people who could not otherwise get in. and we were looking to talk to people outside. it wasn't difficult. the lines were streaming. what i found so interesting is the energy was as high as i have ever seen it. it was a diverse group. we are talking men, women, hispanics, asians, black, whites. it wasn't the traditional old white guys. very informed crowd, too. they know those issues. they were passionate about talking to us about the president. here is some of what the folks said before and after the rally. listen. >> it's not going to be a red wave. it's going to be a red tsunami. pete: would you do you think so? >> hello? you are in texas. >> president trump we elected him and put our hopes in him. is he delivering and is he going to keep delivering. pete: you are hispanic woman. you are not supposed to like this president. >> wrong. there is a lot of us out there. >> my parents came here from mexico. and they came here legally.
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so i don't think it's fair for all these people to be coming in and just automatically say hey, you are a citizen. >> donald trump supports my country. and support the people in the united states from iran because we escaped from iran. >> i'm from nigeria: we cannot have open borders that everybody can run into the country. pete: did you vote for the president? >> yes, i did. i am voting for him again in 2020. >> at the end of the day everybody comes together. that's what ted cruz did and donald trump did. we are all on the same team and we are going to win in november. that's an important thing. pete: a lot of the optimism there. talk to one folk and get to more in the hours coming up as well here at house of pies on curvey drive in houston. come out if you are watching. this this is steven small business owner.
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who ever how are you doing. >> in doing good. pete: had a ticket. weren't able to wait that long and get. in some people were waiting hours and hours and hours. you did watch it on tv. biggest take away last night. >> enthusiasm of the crowd and him. he stirred them up greatly. it was very impressive. and, the idea that, you know, he seems to be following through with everything he said. and i'm 110% behind him. and wish i could do more. pete: what's the issue briefly you are most passionate about? >> mainly the economy and this issue about the border. i think that my situation on how to sol that border issue is a little bit more radical than most. we have got to protect our borders. we have to save it. pete: guys, thank you very much. they are telling me i have got to wrap up. appreciate your time. kavanaugh and the caravan and immigration heard from almost every single person one of those three issues last night, guys. steve: all right. pete hegseth at the house of pies. what time do they start serving pie by the way? >> 24 hours, guys.
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24 hours. ainsley: they don't own keys. another diner that doesn't lock the door. pete: that's right. they never lock it you are welcome any time. ainsley: 5:30 there. it will start to get busy. brian: time sheet packed with money. worked late at night. up early in the morning. this hourly thing is not working out for the company. steve: a little o.t. 22 minutes before the top of the hour on this very busy tuesday and jillian has headlines. jillian: that's right. number of cases in outbreak in a polio like illnessson the rise. the cdc says they are currently investigating 155 cases of acute flaccid my lights. 22% spike in the last week. 62 cases have been confirmed by the cdc in 22 states. serious but rare condition can cause paralysis affecting mostly young kids. there is currently no cure. terrifying surveillance video showing a man breaking into a fox affiliate station in washington, d.c.
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george odom smashing the front entrance of the front door. police shooting him in the chest. is he in critical but stable condition. luckily no employees hurt. he is no stranger to police. he was actually charged with murder in 2002. but the case was dismissed. he has also threatened cops and fox executives in the past. the democratic candidate for georgia governor making headlines for her role in a state flag burns protest. this photo from 1992 in the atlanta journal constitution now reemerging. stacey abrams a freshman at the time seen third from left. her campaign says it was a protest against the confederate symbol in the state flag. eventually abolishing the symbol a decade later. brian kemp will face off in their first debate tonight. a look at your headlines. send it back down stairs to you. steve: i have a feeling that's going to come up in the debate. ainsley: i think. so. brian: back to 1992 when janice dean was in the sixth
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grade. steve: and now she is outside. janice: trying to do the math on that. i don't know if that's good. i think it might be good, brian. actually. these folks here are from massapequa. did you go to school with brian. >> yes, did i. janice: will you tell me stories? >> sure. at another time. janice: fantastic. they are here for brian kilmeade. we do have a hurricane we want to tell you about, make landfall across mexico. this is category 4. it's weakening as we make impact. still looking for potential for catastrophic damage over the pacific coast of mexico. then that moisture, unfortunately is going to go into texas, flooding rainfall for areas that have been saturated by weeks of rain. so that's going to be a big story eventually moving across the gulf coast. okay. these folks are going to tell me all about brian back in the high school days in the commercial break. back to you. brian: everyone dates back to massapequa. even the ry rye no, rhino.
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ainsley: congresswoman me a lo, anthony scaramucci, pam bondy and larry kudlow are all here live this morning. brian: enough about them. what about this. nancy pelosi reveals how she would negotiate with president trump if democrats take back the congress. i will stop now. >> subpoena power is interesting. to use it or not to use it it's a great -- arrow to having a quiver. brian: will that really work in the judge promised to walk across the studio and shake our hand. ♪ cal: we saved our money and now, we get to spend it - our way.
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breathe right strips congeare designed in, to simply open your nose right back up. so with breathe right you can breathe better and sleep better. breathe better. sleep better. breathe right. >> the subpoena power is interesting. to use it or not to use it. it's a great arrow to have in your quiver in terms of negotiating on other subjects. steve: former speaker nancy pelosi revealing how she
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would negotiate with president trump if democrats take back congress in two weeks. brian: how exactly would that work? i want to ask fox news' senior judicial an list judge andrew napolitano. he wants me to read the title right or he gets angry. i'm only kidding. judge, how would that work? >> listen, we all know donald trump. i don't think she should start off by threatening him. but, basically say going we take the house, we're going to use the subpoena power. and we're going going to threaten subpoenas unless you come over to our side. that's one way to look at it. we're going to work with the president. if he doesn't we're going to use the subpoena power. basically, the majority of each house can subpoena the executive branch and force testimony and force documents as the republicans did to obama, steve and i were just talking about this. president obama with benghazi. as the republicans have attempted to do with a republican doj with very much resistance with rod
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rosenstein. i see you rolling your eye us. it's insane. as if there are two different parties rather than the same. ainsley: what would they subpoena? give us an example. you say the documents. what would the democrats want to see? >> whatever they thought would frustrate the executive branch. you want to build the wall? show us who you have been negotiating with. let's see the emails. let's see where you want the money to go. let's see whose property the government is going to have to take. ainsley: is what rush limbaugh said was going to happen. if you win see subpoenas and investigations? >> yes. the democrats believe that they can be a break on donald trump. we have divided government. a democratic house presumably a republican astronaut they less know they can drive him crazy. the chairman of the senate judiciary committee -- or the house judiciary committee if the democrats take the house, representation this part of manhattan has already said we are going to commence impeachment investigations against donald trump and brett kavanaugh. steve: sure. >> hot heck wants that? brian: that's going to hurt
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them at the ballot box. steve: we have heard the threat of subpoena over rod rosenstein. haul him in to figure out what he actually knew about wearing a wire and stuff like that that was in the "new york times." but now the subpoena power threat has been reduced to okay. he is going to show up, only a couple perform members of congress are going to be able to talk to him. it's going to be tribed. not necessarily going under oath but then they are going to redact it. >> two republicans and two democrats in secret. the stated reason for the secret rosenstein testimony is so he can discuss classified materials. steve is 100 percent correct. once the court stenographer reproduces this as a transcript it goes to the doj and goes to the intelligence community to white out what they don't want the public to know. brian: when is a lot. >> the prediction is more will be whited out than what remains. brian: investigation almost stops into what was going on with the fbi. >> if the democrats do take the house, republicans have to finish their work by christmas. they will lose their
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subpoena power come january 3rd. brian: i know there is a frustration among george papadopoulos in particular. he wants this out in the public. his life was destroyed by these people. he wants to be able to take them on and tell everybody what he knows. they have got to go behind closed doors. judge: he told you quite a story. brian: his attorneys made it public with a letter. >> judge: all right, guys. thank you. all the best. steve: of course it all comes down to two weeks from today whether they take control. meanwhile, straight ahead. ainsley: 12 minutes before the top of the hour. florida attorney general pam bondy has been harassed by the left. >> what would mr. rogers think about you, pam bondy. shame on you. shame on you. shame on you. ainsley: now she says civility and politics is needed more than ever. she is going to join with us a warning in the next hour. why bother mastering something?
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brian kind of exciting day andrew jackson miracle of new orleans came out a year ago today and today it comes out in paperback. if you missed it on the first way around. it's a little cheaper now. i put together a new afterward because for some reason our history seems to be under attack. steve: a lot has happened in the year since you put that out. brian: right. so here's a look at andrew jackson, the miracle of new orleans, the battle that still has military people in all, what he accomplished and the big controversies today. watch. [gunfire] >> fire! >> 29 years after defeating the british and winning our independence, america was on the brink of annihilation in the war of 1812. the british were terrorizing the east coast, had burned washington, d.c. to the ground. they were heading down south
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to finish us off. perilous times. here at the hermitage major general andrew jackson was seething. he offered his michelle to go into battle to fight the british in the war of 1812 never got the returned call. his country was losing this war badly. we get the call? yes. would he offer revenge on the british? absolutely. america needed a leader. think looked to jackson. jackson enters the war and things turn. a series of small victories all led to the final clash in new orleans. the historic french quarter, charters in st. louis. wife would i bring to you this intersection? because it was right here in this building, 200 plus years ago where andrew jackson met with his generals and they scechesd out a battle plan to take on the british was nothing shorts of brilliant and yielded unparalleled success. the plan? build a wall. dig a canal, fill it with water and wait. wait for the british to charge. the british walked right into the trap and were
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defeated january 8th, 1815 in under 45 minutes. >> if you lost new orleans and if the british controlled the great city, you lose the entire mississippi river and you lose all of our western frontier that we acquired through the purchase. so we wouldn't have been able to do western expansion. the war of 1812 allowed jackson to earn a new title, war hero, catapulting him to the presidency for two terms. the boy by 13 ended up as one of the most powerful mental in personal history. he was also one of the most controversial. nobody doubts that andrew jackson was an impactful president. now his legacy is being re-examined today. why? because of people who lived in quarters like that. those are slave quarters. at that point jackson had over 100 slaves working the hermitage property. he had famous battle with end yans and indian removal act. with all those things aside it hasn't stopped 14
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presidents. some of the best we have ever had to come to this place to find out what made andrew jackson, andrew jackson. lincoln saw our jackson kept our country together after south carolina tried to succeed during his administration. teddy roosevelt wrote a book on jackson and studied his leadership principles. in andrew truman andrew jackson had, perhaps, his greatest admirier. >> harry truman kept a figurine on his desk of jackson. >> that's correct. and actually came here to measure jackson's clothes so that the statues he commissioned for kansas city and independence were proportioned to jackson. brian: then ronald reagan came here to, wait a second to salute the founder of the democratic party. ronald reagan came here to speak. >> spoke very we he we hem negligently about jackson we h.
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-- >> andrew jackson was a myrtle hero and genius. and beloved president. andrew jackson the war he. the way he lived made him infamous and most agree for america indispensable. steve: we have heard so much about him you lay it out so clearly. brian: donald trump being president saying he is a lot like me thanks to steve bannon schooling him on the history he really loves andrew jackson. ainsley: known as a tough guy. brian: self-made, showing you can do whatever you want. he didn't have any political or financial connections. ainsley: orphaned as a child. >> brian: wind out because of the war. ainsley: all of his fears and anything concerning to him he only told his wife. brian: absolutely. shy passed away before he entered the white house basically out of stress and she held washington responsible. steve: now you are going on the road. brian: going to saints lewis friday.
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baton rouge, louisiana i'm finally going saturday. please meet me there. and then, of course, new orleans i will be there in the afternoon. go to brian kilmeade.com find out how to get tickets and come out. ainsley: congratulations, brian. out in paperback today. brian: hope you like it. ainsley: mia love, anthony scaramucci and larry kudlow here live. hydrates better than $100, $200 even $400 eye creams. that's something to see. olay the new lincoln mkc.mix. connecting the world inside, with the world outside.
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>> this will be the election of the caravan, kavanaugh, law and order tax cuts and common sense. >> democrats hope for a blue wave appear to be fading. >> we always knew this election was going to be close. >> a lot of people talk about this blue wave and all this stuff, yoble. >> gina haspel traveling to turkey amid international outcry. >> she will be there firsthand to examine the evidence and talk with senior turkish officials. >> nancy pelosi admitted if elected speaker she is planning on using subpoena
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powers bargaining chip against the president. >> subpoena powers is interesting in terms of negotiating on other subjects. >> if you want the fake news to finally investigate hillary clinton, we will just have to nominate hillary clinton to the united states supreme court. how do you like that? can you imagine hillary up there? that would take three to four years of questions. ♪ good morning ♪ good morning ♪ good morning ♪ ainsley: well, good morning to you on this beautiful tuesday. the president was in houston. everything is bigger in texas and yesterday it was huge. there were people standing outside there were big screen food carts, live music while he was inside having that rally in front of 18,000 people. brian: not many people would think ted cruz needed the help. beto o'rourke gotten tremendous momentum. $38,000 worth of funding. president told ted cruz you
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need help i will be there. he got that big venue. he got at love interest. keep in mind michael avenatti was so convinced that he could do just as great an event he was going to have resistance event. for some reason he decided to not go through with it if you watched last night you will know why. steve: for the people in that hall, it was exciting. you saw much of it right here on the fox news channel. you could see that the messaging for the white house has changed. you did see a lot of those signs that now say jobs, not mobs. just trying to energize the base and try to dissuade independent voters two weeks from today go for the republicans. ainsley: promised made, promises kept on the ticker all the way around the arena. brian: there was a time focus group and tested and go out. the president responds to the news and comes up with new themes in these events. that's why i think so many people go. they don't know what he is actually going to say. steve: right. brian: it's no read the prompter, thanks for coming. i have got to run.
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it is kavanaugh, the vary van. ohcaravan. law and order. mobs and jobs. steve: there to prop up ted cruz do make sure ted cruz gets across the finish line and wins his seat in the senate. remember it, wasn't that long ago when the president when they were locking horns in the primary referred to him as lyin' ted. now is he beautiful ted. things seem to be copasetic down in texas. watch this. >> it's true what they say, everything in texas is just bigger. the people of texas are going to reelect a man who has back really good friend of mine. you know, we had our little difficulties. right? but, actually, if you remember, the beginning, it was a love fest. nobody has helped me more with your tax cuts, with your regulation, with all of the things that we're doing. you know, what's happening
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right now as a large group of people. they call it the caravan. [crowd boos. i think the democrats have something to do with it this will be out election of the caravan, kavanaugh, law and order, tax cuts, and common sense. today's democrat party would rather protect criminal aliens, than american citizens, which is why the democrats must be voted out of office. the democrats want to replace freedom with socialism. and they want to replace the rule of law with the rule of the mob. democrats produce mobs. republicans produce jobs. in this election, you can send a message to the radical democrats, don't mess with texas. steve: big question is was
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that effective in trying to turn out the base there in the great state of texas? houston smashed an early voting record. the local papers are reporting this morning. and then nts then nbc did an ans of seven close states and found that republican voters are outpacing democratic voters in early voting. is there going to be a blue wave? even some democrats are now saying maybe not. but it's going to be close for the house. brian: republicans absentee blot while democrats tend-to-have early voting in person. florida is going to be a big deal a lot of congressional seats in texas which are under scrutiny. ainsley: no doubt very close. tom perezs chair of the dnc and bernie sanders have said they don't call it a blue wave anymore. nancy pelosi calls it a tsunami. they don't call it a blue wave. it's more of of a purple wave.
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steve: she needs a tsunami. she wants to come speaker again. brian: she actually thinks she is. now to a fox news alert. that caravan is not going away. it has grown to a mile long as it heads straight to our border. steve: but u.s. agents are already dealing with criminals knowingly breaking the law. ainsley: griff jenkins is live in mcallen, texas where is he seeing those border busts first hand. griff? griff: good morning, guys. that's right. the closest port of entry to that 7,000 strong and growing migrant caravan is mcallen texas right behind me. before they get to this border there is already influx of people crossing. yesterday we witnessed first hand, watch. >> w we are in the bushes hiding to witness these crossings. coming in right now. you can see they have a family in a raft. >> committee, sir, were you trying to cross into america
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illegally? so what we are witnessing now is clearly a family that was being brought over by that smuggler that was paddling in the raft. this is an attempt to illegally cross. and they have gone back over there we seemed to have foiled this attempt. >> can you tell me why have you come illegally. >> the conditions in honduras. >> what are the conditions there? >> you cannot have work there. the criminals always will get your money. griff griff but they are not all women and children. officials here announcing over the weekend, a man wanted for murder in south carolina was arrested here in america allen as well as a member of the 18th street gang. guys? brian: yeah. that was not part of the caravan, griff, right? you just happened to be there in mcallen, that's a border crossing?
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>> that's right. that was not part of the caravan. the caravan is 1100 miles south of here. this the closest entry for the central americans is where the insnrux overwhelmed. we don't know where they are going to go. organizers haven't said. when we find out, it's going to be quite a task for them. steve: griff, we thank you very much. meanwhile this morning, "the washington post" has got an item talking a little bit about some of the people in the caravan, which is 1,000 miles from griff. there are a lot of people who have been in this country before but they were deported and that shows you essentially where they are right now. and "the washington post" quotes a number of people, a fellow by the name of emner fuentas was deported six times. he keeps coming back. he needs a job. it's easy though to cross the border which because of the laws are ridiculous in some cases. some will, accord ing to "the washington post. some will apply for asylum. but most migrants are not planning to apply for asylum. what they're going to do is try to figure out where none
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of the guards are and go across that way and then go into the united states of america. ainsley: at first it started with 160 in honduras and into guatemala and into new mexico. it's grown and grown and grown. they still have 1100 miles to go. how big is it going to grow and how big is it going to get. some are saying this is their opportunity they catch you and try to get back. in one guy said i knew about the caravan and knew it was my chance. brian: almost all young men. there are young families but looks like mostly young mental. the president of the united states said listen, first he praised mexico kohl and look, obviously they weren't able to do the job. he tweeted out 10u78 of the derogatory there and made it clear in a tweet yesterday honduras, he will value is a door el salvador and guatemala countries. give them $5 million in aid. they will take a hit on that.
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withdraw from bank accounts or deposits thought going to get there because they are unable to control their borders? ainsley: what are they doing with the money we are giving them? why is it unsafe. are we the only ones giving aid? i don't know? steve: democrats meanwhile, remember, the midterms are two weeks from today. the democrats are juggling to come up with an answer to when the president says look, see that group of people, the caravan heading toward the united states. that's a result of the democratic party not working with republicans in congress to fix our broken immigration laws. top democrats don't want to talk about it according to "the washington post" this morning as well. because they think that healthcare is a winning issue for them. any of time someone asks about the immigration they try to divert back to healthcare. brian: very balanced. migrants as election employee. ploy. besides that i will report the facts.
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there is your opinion in the headline. hi, jillian. jillian: hi, brian, ainsley and steve. ainsley: good morning. jillian: following a fox news alert. panic at the university of utah overnight after a student is shot and killed on campus. the university going on lockdown as police search the massive campus for the shooter. the suspect roll land found dead after shooting himself inside a church off campus. police believe roll land, a registered sex offender was the victim's ex-boyfriend. he was not a student at the university. now, in an earlier version of this story we showed you the wrong video. we showed you pictures of senator kamala harris instead of roll land's mugshot. we apologize for that error. a south carolina sheriff's deputy died two weeks after a shooting that left a second officer dead and five others injured. the 43rd officer shot and killed in the line of duty this year. a memorial service is beginning today for fallen georgia police officer antwon tony u he was killed in the line of duty over the weekend.
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tv will heend bob barker rushed to the hospitals overnight. the former price is right host being treated for serious back pain in los angeles. he spent 35 years hosting the classic game show before retiring in 2007. he will celebrate his 95th birthday in december. do you want to be a billionaire? who doesn't, right? here is your chance. the jackpot for tonight's mega millions drawing up to a record $1.6 billion. the numbers will be drawn at 11:00 p.m. eastern. and tomorrow there is another chance to win big. the power ball prizes up to 620 million bucks. the chance of winning both jackpots is 1 in 88 quadrillion. did you get tickets? steve: yes. sally went and bought them. ainsley: i haven't gotten the new ones. i got them a few days ago and no one won. brian. jillian: i don't play. ainsley: brian doesn't play. steve: two bucks if you are lucky and win it.
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brian: pam bondy has been harassed by many on the left. >> what would mr. rogers think about you? , pam bondy. same on you. shame on you. shame on you. brian: now she says civility in politics is needed more than ever. she joining us live with a warning for the left next. ainsley: plus, she wants to be the next governor of georgia. one problem. democrat stacey abrams just confessed to burning her state's flag. ♪ i fought the law ♪ and the law won ♪ did you ever notice that the very first bite of every great meal is always the potato? that's why it should always be an idaho potato. only genuine idaho potatoes have the perfect taste and texture to get your meal started right.
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>> we have been telling you about republican leaders targeted by leftist protesters and our next guest is no stranger to that sort of abuse. >> what would mr. rogers think about you, pam bondi? shame on you! shame on you! shame on you! steve: in the distance florida attorney general pam bondi accosted at the movies this past summer as she says civility in politics is needed more now than ever. she joins us from tampa. good morning to you. the irony weren't you leaving a movie about
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bullying? >> i was. about mr. rogers, who we all grew up with. it was a documentary about his life, about kindness and civility. the irony of that. it actually started before we went in the movie. about three times. of course they didn't air that video i said i'm glad you are videoing this. let me tell you my position on these issues. steve: there is an interesting perspective on some of the other channels where they are blaming the president of the united states for people getting up in the face of republicans. >> steve, i heard that, too. yesterday as well. and on a competing network. i heard that on a network and they said i could not believe that this person said it's president trump's fault, really? they did not mention the architect of this plan, maxine waters who continues to raise these horrible, horrible thoughts t to do to all of us. nor did her protestor gay eric holder. i know eric holder. i worked with eric holder.
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for him to say kick them when they're down? at least they will give michelle obama a lot of credit for saying that was wrong. steve: let's talk about the caravan. the democrats not talking so much about it because they haven't really come up with, you know, in the past, democrats have called for the accomplishment of ice. they would prefer to talk a little bit about healthcare and not about the caravan. but, you know, for people watching right now. they are thinking, what's going to happen with these people? what is going to happen, pam? >> well, ultimately, they are going to be arrested if they try to breach our country. law and order. i'm a career prosecutor as you know, steve, and i have seen first hand what comes in to our country from mexico, from china to mexico, into our country. the heroin, the fentanyl. all the drugs. the gang members. i have seen this as a prosecutor in florida for years and years.
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so, we have to protect our borders. and, you know, you are looking at these people. these breaking down that fence to get into mexico. it's violent. and it's got to stop. and the fact that they would even risk children being out there with them, that shows they are not here peacefully. we have seen them burning the american flag. they are here to cause trouble -- i can't say that for all of them, of course. but we have got to protect our country, our citizens and our kids from the drugs, from the human trafficking. from -- that's why we have borders and that's why we have a vetting process in our country. steve: looks like most of them are not going to apply for asylum. most are just going to try slip across the border and in many cases try to get jobs. pam bondi, attorney general of the great state of florida. pam, thank you very much for joining us live. steve: thank you. 7:20 in new york city. that caravan of migrants is about 1,000 miles from our u.s. border. this is personal for our
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next guest. she is a legal immigrants. and her son was murdered by an illegal. her message for that caravan coming up.
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brian: quick headlines and toss over to anxiously. new overnight some news talk about political attacks. here we go. the fbi joint terrorism task force is investigating after explosive device was found at a billionaire george soros' home. employee at soros' new york home calling police after discovering a suspicious package inside his mailbox the bomb squad blowing it up. soros was not home at the time. through kevin mccarty's office. very nice. two men caught on surveillance cameras. also took office equipment.
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incredible. anxiously? ainsley: thank you, brian. as the migrant caravan is pushing closer to the united states border. president trump doubles down on his concerns about them entering our country. >> that is an assault on our country. in cheers] >> in that caravan have you very bad people. we can't let that happen to our country. and it's not. ainsley: our next guest is an angel mom who immigrated legally from hungary, has a message for the thousands of migrants marching here to the united states. her name is agnes. there is a picture of her son. his name was ronald. lost him when he was shot by illegal immigrant in 2002. she joins us now. agnes, thank you for being with us. >> thank you for having me. ainsley: you are welcome. my heart goes out to you because did you it the right way. you are a legal immigrant. you wanted a better life forevefor yourchildren. you brought your son here or
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had your son here. i'm not sure. i guess you brought him over and then he was killed by illegal. tell us what happened to him. >> well, actually my family, my brother and myself legally immigrated here. and my son was born here in the united states. he was gangs member was going to shoot my friend and got my son instead. he fled to mexico immediately after the shooting. and eventually he turned himself in when the law enforcement found out she was harboring and depositing her welfare check at local credit union so he can live off of in mexico. ainsley: when you see this caravan coming up toward the united states, what's your message to them? >> i want to tell them to stop. this mob, this criminal activity, this is -- these are -- i'm speechless. this is a mob that's invading our country and this needs to be stopped. they don't respect our country. they didn't respect the borders into mexico.
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they tore down their wall and mexico has very strict immigration laws. and they didn't care. what makes anybody think that they are going to respect american laws? we don't need these people here. if they are legitimately refugees, don't come here just because you need a job. that's not a real reason to be a refugee. go to the port of entry. ainsley: agnes, what is your message for lawmakers. i want to know how long it took for you to get your entire family into this country? do we need to change the immigration laws to make it faster and easier for families doing it the right way? >> it's not unreasonable, the time that it is required. have you got to go through a full background investigation. full medical. make sure that you have good character, good morals. and come in to this country it takes a few months once the process is started. waiting until you start may take a little longer. you need upon patient like my family was. we never for a minute thought about invading this
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country coming here as a tourist and overstaying our visa. that needs to stop. we have immigration laws. we need to enforce them. lawmakers need to work with president trump congress has wasted so much time and rinos need to quit wasting so much time criticizing our president and melania trump. they need to start getting busy to protect us. notice that the democrats are very quiet right now. think are not saying anything. ainsley: they have been told not. to say they know it's not a popular topic and here we are two weeks out from the midterms. i'm sorry, agnes for your locals. thank you for coming on. >> thank you for having me. thank you. ainsley: no documents? no problem. one state says you can vote without having proof you even leave there pete hegseth is having breakfast with friends after president trump's rally. pete? pete: good morning.
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i'm here with vicki, john and jimmy. jimmy and i have been friends for a while. is he a retired marine air pilot and a nurse. we will goat their thoughts. some of them were at the rally. some of them couldn't get into the rally. others were working like hard-working americans. what are the issues that are important to them. two weeks away from the midterms. we are here at the house of pies on kirby drive in houston. come on out if you are not here already ♪ get down ♪ you keep doing you. we'll take care of medicare part d. by helping you save up to five dollars on each prescription, and with free one-on-one pharmacy support, we've filled over 2 billion prescriptions and counting. stop by walgreens and save today. walgreens. trusted since 1901.
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takes more than just investment advice. from insurance to savings to retirement, it takes someone with experience and knowledge who can help me build a complete plan. brian, my certified financial planner™ professional, is committed to working in my best interest. i call it my "comfortable future plan," and it's all possible with a cfp® professional. find your certified financial planner™ professional at letsmakeaplan.org. >> i didn't do it. if you want them to investigate, we'll just have to nominate hillary clinton to the united states supreme court. how do you like that? [crowd boos] let's see how she does. if judge kavanaugh had to go through what he went through, and there is -- he
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is a fine man. can you imagine hillary up there? [laughter] that would take three to four years of questions. steve: one of the laugh lines last night at the big trump rally down in houston, texas. because the president was there, we have dispatched pete hegseth to the house of pies in houston. pete: yes, absolutely. this is the by venue what is it called the bayou pie? i will have to get the official. the pies here are great. great folks here in texas. we got a chance to talk to vicki, john and jimmy. you were not able to go to the rally. you had a ticket. >> had a ticket, didn't go. pete: you watched it from your bed, saw the whole thing. >> absolutely. pete: i was there on the ground. the energy was palatable. i also heard from multiple people, kavanaugh and caravan were issues that were really firing up republicans. are those issues that are animating you. >> they have fired me up as well. the energy was palpable.
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i'm afraid no one is going to want to be on the supreme court. they are not going to wants to go through that they shouldn't have to go through that. pete: how about on the caravan side? what about that gets you. >> i believe we have some low paying jobs for these people, but i just don't know how our system can afford to support them. pete: you are saying that as a nurse as well healthcare. >> yes. i definitely am. i think we need to take care of our own. i don't have any problems with immigrants coming into this country because we have all been immigrants at some point. however, we have to know who is entering the country and have to know how to get in touch with them. we just need to vet them properly. pete: absolutely. the president has talked about that extreme vetting. you are a pilot. you were there last night. >> i was. pete: your take on the speech. >> awesome. the crowd was riled up for the president. at some point, washington
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tell the whole story. i don't know how anyone could go another direction than what he was talking about last night. pete: what does the left stand for. >> it's about the votes they block. they mentioned it last night. for some reason they choose to sail together as a block. you don't see that on the other side. pete: they are good at sticking together? >> 100 percent. i have never seen people stick together even in a losing cause. pete: more enthusiastic about this president today. >> i'm in that category 100 percent. pete: why? >> because of what he has done for the country. look at the economy first. there is time left to do things even in this term that he will get done if we can keep control of things that stay on the right track. pete: rumor fired up now as a result of midterms? >> i think. so i think it's going to go another direction. i hope there is a surprise on november 6th. i voted yesterday. pete: you did. >> i already voted. pete: i think i may know how
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voted for: jimmy, you are retired marine. georgia bulldog. your take. what issues matter the most to you? >> immigration. the caravan that's coming from central america is very concerning. going to have to be a decision points at some time toll decide what to do. if they get all the way here, might have to put military on the border. pete: that's what i was going to ask you time go to put military. >> overrun ice agencies. they can only do so much. we have resources in the military that can do things like that. might be necessary. pete: guy know what's is talking about. thank you all for your time. i will tell you, one thing about the voters i saw last night as well. extremely informed. people are dialed in on the issues right now. they are following it day by day. they are going to make a vote based on what they believe. in not based on some ad they see at the last second. a lot of passionate support on both sides. back to you. ainsley: nice to be talking about the issues finally instead of investigation and russia collusion for a
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change. brian: that will start after the election. steve: pete, you are done. you can dig into that piece of bayou pie. >> bayou pie. steve: and let us know. ainsley: sounds like it tastes good. brian: jillian is not allowed to snack on the job. she works full time. jillian: i actually don't like pie. no pie. ainsley: anti-pie. jillian: i have never met a pie i like. i'm weird. ainsley: i know you like cake. jillian: get you caught up on this. former president barack obama taking credit for the surging economy. >> talk about economic miracles right now. remember who started it. jillian: former president saying his administration left cleaning up after the bush administration. those comments coming in nevada while president trump held a rally at the same time in texas. the current president drawing about 19,000 plus an
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overflow crowd compared to obama's crowd of about 2,000. but who is counting? no documents? no problem. a new hampshire judge blocking a law that would have required proof of residency for some voters when they register. the judge argues it would create long lines at polling places and be too complicated for students, disabled voters and others to cast their ballot. the law which effects people trying to register within 30 days of an election passed along party lines last year. a new jersey mom something hailed a hero for stopping a potential school shooting hundreds of miles away. calling kentucky police after getting a racist facebook message about her children i was an gla someone could even think that way about three beautiful children. ainsley: investigators catching them man pulling out of his driveway. he admitted to sending the message. police also believe he was about to carry out a school shooting after finding
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ammunition, a gun and a detailed plan of an attack and this story is just too cute. a 5-year-old girl mistaking a bride for cinderella at park in new york. check it out. the bride taking wedding pictures with her husband when she made little layla's fairy tale come true. isn't that adorable? look at your headlines. steve: that is sweet. ainsley: that's a little girl who is allowed to watch cinderella. brian: we know actresses don't think it's a good message. steve: heard that last week. janice dean is on the street. janice: how are you today. >> great. janice: where are you from. >> dallas, tennessee. chattanooga, tennessee. >> illinois. janice: any of you related to brian kilmeade. >> no. janice: you don't have any stories? talk about it later though. we will take a look at the maps real quick. something serious i want to talk to you about.
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hurricane will la. major hurricane move into mexico this afternoon. and then it starts to weaken. but the problem is all of that moisture is going to stream up towards panhandle. texas has been rain last few weeks. workweek some of that energy is going to move across the gulf coast and perhaps give us a coastal storm for the northeast this weekend. all right. you guys excited to be here in new york? >> absolutely. janice: does everyone know you are on "fox & friends"? >> yes. they expect brian to buy all of us breakfast. brian: house of pie sending pie. >> she wants to be the next governor of the great state of georgia but democrat stacey abrams just confessed to apparently burning her state's flag once upon a time. how did l. that impact the election? we are going to examine the big governor's races coming up next.
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brian: plus, first pitch is just hours away. the boston red sox and los angeles dodgers two legendary franchises face off in the world series. todd piro is live outside fenway park because he forgot the keys. ♪ it isn't a deadly predator. or a made-up creature. it doesn't have wings, horns or teeth. there's no self-appointed crown. it doesn't repurpose someone else's legacy. it's not a metaphor or the result of a merger. it's none of those things. it's our family name.
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♪ my love has come along, applebee's new neighborhood pastas. now that's eatin' good in the neighborhood. jillian: good morning, welcome back. time for quick headlines. a huge ball of fire shoots into the air. the explosion happened alcohol factory in new york city. not sure what caused a blast. one person is hurt. a hand cuffed woman steals a police car. watch this. >> what is she doing? >> trying to steal your car. >> stop, stop.
quote
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>> jillian: well, jeesh, that woman speeding away in the police car in tulsa, oklahoma. she somehow got inside after cops pulled her over for driving another stolen car. arrested back in march. police just released that video. crazy. brian? brian: crazy is accurate. okay. we are just two weeks away from the midterm elections, exactly. not just the house and senate that's up for grabs. a lot of key governor races across the country heating up. focus on georgia, for example, where this photo of democratic candidate stacey abrams much younger 1982 1992. burning a flag in a protest. republican poll sterile and columnist for th "the washington examiner" kristen soltis anderson. stacey abrams 2 point deaf out to brian kemp. we thought this was a ruby red state. what's happening? >> georgia is one of those states that democrats have long thought has the potential to become a swing
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state. because georgia has a very large african-american population and they view this year as the year they could potentially flip georgia blue. with stacey abrams being nominated for governor. she is the first african-american woman to be nominated by a major party for the governor's ma mansion. when it comes to the photo that just came out it, will be interesting to see how this changes the race. when she was burning the flag, it was during the 1990s, period of time when the flag had the confederate flag on it. it was removed in 2003. nonetheless, already a race where there is lots of tensions between the republican and the democrat. this will surely just bring them more to the surface. brian: does make more sense if you are burning the flag stars and bars. fraternal woman in college. an dry gillum in the process, perhaps, of shocking the world. a very successful state coming off a republican governor's 8 years in
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office. andrew gillum, he is having -- even though he is not the most successful mayor in florida, under fbi investigation with a 4 point on average lead over ron desantis. >> that's right. so florida has had republican governors for quite a while. and the idea that democrats could take the governor's mansion in florida is also sort of a massive political development. in this race, you have two candidates who are really tapped into what their party's bases care about. ron desantis on the republican side. big supporter of president trump. really was able to fire up the conservative base and win that primary by large margins. on the democrats side andrew gillum's win a surprise overcoming graham. he did it by aligning the african-american in florida with the really perspective bernie sanders base. the question is of which these two men is going to be able to win the middle. at the moment gillum has a
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slight advantage it varies widely poll to poll. still a fun race to watch. brian: i have got to say, too. the former governor, rick scott going against bill nelson for that florida senate seat. bill nelson has that seat. they are trying to work in a day. is he supposed to appear with us at some point in the not too distant future. in wisconsin, scott walker. how much trouble is he in. very successful governor front run tore possibly run for president of the united states. and tony everies wit everies wie lead. >> faced a recall. he has been a survivor and yet now is he trailing very slightly in the polling averages against his democratic opponent. this is one of those races that you tell might have gone bad -- or is going bad for republican if scott walker is really on the ropes. brian: down ticket after that. in maryland the republican larry mow began looks very much in command. thanks so much. i appreciate it kristen
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soltis anderson. appreciate it? >> thanks. brian: coming up straight ahead. congresswoman mia love says she is being targeted in a smear campaign over campaign contribution. she was just cleared from all wrong-doing and here to talk about it she will join us next hour. countdown is one. game one of the red sox and dodgers facing off on the world series. todd piro live outside fenway park tonight where they won 108 regular season games. ♪ happy anniversary dinner, darlin'. can this much love be cleaned by a little bit of dawn ultra? oh yeah one bottle has the grease cleaning power of three bottles of this other liquid. a drop of dawn and grease is gone. introducing the new capital one savor card. earn 4% cash back on dining and 4% on entertainment. now when you go out, you cash in. what's in your wallet?
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only a few hours away from game one. l.a. dodgers. and the boston red sox. steve: red sox hosting the dodgers in fenway park. that's where we find "fox & friends" correspondent todd todd
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piro. hello, todd. todd: hey, guys. good morning to you from a very chilly fenway park. game time, first pitch 8:09 eastern time. and what a so much intrigue. where do we start. east vs. west coast. you have the stadiums themselves. fenway behind us here. iconic ball park and let's not forget about dodgers stadium amazing park in and of itself. what about the managers? each of those guys played for the red sox and dodgers during playing careers. who can forget? yankee fans can, of course. dave roberts stealing that base against the yankees propelling the red sox into the world series in 2004 and ending the curse. let's not forget about this pitching match july chris sail vs. clayton kershaw. pitching is going to be on display. let's not forget about the hitters. some of those hitters bats
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made by that richay. tha marucc. we went down to check it out. ♪ >> how are you doing? >> how are you doing? todd: this is awesome joined by kurt ainsworth ceo of marucci former mlb player. what was it like. >> dream come true. got a chance to experience that and stay in the game with this. todd: took that experience to start with unreal made in america company. >> really did. everything here is still hand crafted. hand cut, hand sanded, hand painted. todd: when the white house called you up and said you are a made in america company and what went through your mind. >> it was a humbling experience to get that call and to be able to god into the white house and represent louisiana and made in the america product showcase there. todd: what's it like to see the president of the united states holding one of your bats? >> really amazing experience to watch him do that in the white house. you can't get anything
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better than that we actually made him a bat with his name on it and with the vice president's name on it when they looked at the bat it was something pretty special. >> thank you. that's very nice. >> everyone likes a bat with their name on it. todd: we have got ours. there it is. check out. >> all the cutting controlled by this machine right here. >> absolutely. precision is key. we have over 6,000 models. todd: are all the bats sanded the same. >> no, they are not. in order to get the pro-player's weattle exactly the way they want. we do it by hand. some other depending on what they want. todd: this is where you put the finishing touches? >> these guys here in charge to make sure it's right before it gets to the players. makes, models, color. everything they expect this our boughts they ensure it's everything they want. todd: what's awesome about what you described every step in that process is made in america job. >> 100 percent. great team. we really have a lot of pride in what we do. to be able to see it on tv is really special. ♪
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♪ todd: what does made in america mean to you? >> it's special. we love the country here obviously. we want to do more and more products here as we go. that's one thing in this administration that we do like and it is a challenge for us. we want to start bringing more and more product lines back to america to join the wood bats that are 100 percent made in america. todd: game one comes your way in a little more than 12 hours from now. joe buck, john smolts on the call only on fox. if i'm not mistaken, you guys have a present sitting there in studio with you, right? steve: that's right. i hold in my hand the "fox & friends" bat as seen on tv. ainsley: it's beautiful. made in america. todd: isn't it a pretty piece of manufacturing. it's a baseball bat it's so pretty. steve: too pretty to use. we have to future on the wall. brian: if we go to use it we will never lose. not miss a pitch. ainsley: watch the game here
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tonight on fox affiliate. steve: straight ahead on telecast final hour. congresswoman mia love, anthony scaramucci has a brand new book out today. it's great. and national economic council director larry kudlow. we will ask him about the president's 10% middle class tax cut. brian: yes. we need details ♪ ito take care of anyct messy situations.. and put irritation in its place. and if i can get comfortable keeping this tookus safe and protected... you can get comfortable doing the same with yours.
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preparation h. get comfortable with it. . .
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♪ >> in this election you can send a message to the radical democrats, don't me with texas. [cheering] steve: turns out republican vote remembers outpacing democratic voters in arizona, in florida, in georgia, in indiana, montana, tennessee, texas. ainsley: that care vaughn growing to a mile long as it is heading straight up to our border. >> this is a mob invading our country and this sneads to be stopped. >> when you hear all this talk about economic miracles right now, remember who started it. if you got a business, you didn't build that. somebody else made that happen.
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>> nancy pelosi reveals how she would negotiate with president trump. >> subpoena power is interesting in terms of negotiating with other subjects. >> if we take the house, we'll threaten subpoenas, unless you come over to our side. want us to build the wall, show us who you're negotiating with. >> jackpot for megamillions drawing is $1.6 billion. ♪ steve: ladies and gentlemen, this is hour three of "fox & friends" for this very busy tuesday. live from new york city. great to have you on board, thank you very much. ainsley: thanks for joining us. we appreciate it. everyone cast camping out, waiting to get inside. 18,000 people in the an arena in houston. brian: texas was its own country for a while, now it is a part of our country and a major part of our country, a part for a long time was democrat. for a long time recent has been
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a republican state. some were getting nervous, even last time when president trump was running in 2016, you know what mr. president, donald trump, you get down there, you might lose texas. he didn't lose texas. beto o'rourke comes out of nowhere, high q rating, raised $38 million. ted cruz, look out, beto o'rourke giving a run for you money. he opened up a 8-point lead. president trump said, i will come down to help you out. ainsley: you're not longer lying and you're beautiful, texas ted. steve: ted cruz is leading in the polls. the county in houston, where president appeared, first-day voting surged, broke all records, 63,000 people voted first day in marries county, texas. the previous record was 35,000. they almost doubled it. was donald trump part of that? maybe, don't know. nonetheless his rally last night
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was wide-ranging. he touched on everything, the folks in the crowd wanted to hear. ainsley: listen to the crowd. steve: no kidding, here they are. >> it's true what they say, everything in texas is just bigger. the people of texas are going to reelect a man who has become a really good friend of mine. we had our little difficulties, right? but actually, if you remember, the beginning, it was a love-fest. nobody has helped me more with your tax cuts, with your regulation, with all of the things that we're doing. you know, what's happening right now as a large group of people, they call it a caravan. [booing] i think the democrats have something to do with it. this will be the election of the caravan, kavanaugh, law and order, tax cuts and common sense.
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today's democrat party would rather protect criminal aliens than american citizens which is why the democrats must be voted out of office. the democrats want to replace freedom with socialism. [booing] they want to replace the rule of law with the rule of the mob. democrats produce mobs. republicans produce jobs. in this election you can send a message to the radical democrats, don't mess with texas. steve: there you go. that's the president. 100,000 people responded for tickets. so it was going to be interesting to see how many people would wind up outside. big techs sass tailgate. ainsley: big screen. live music. steve: halfway out the country, in the desert, former president barack obama was in the university of nevada. nevada, where he was essentially
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trying to galvanize support for representative jackie rosen who is in the tight race in the u.s. senate with dean heller. brian: heller is in a state hillary clinton won. him and the president clashed. they have mended their ways. he is up by a few points in nevada. but back to the rescue, barack obama. no tie. no jacket. how effective? well let's see. an idea who he might be looking to slam? how about donald trump? >> this is not just about one person in the white house. it is not a democratic or a republican idea. that we are not supposed to pressure the attorney general or the fbi to use the criminal justice system to try to punish political opponents. that is not how america works. that is how some tin pot dictatorship works. they tried to get people angry. you know. and they appeal to tribe and appeal to fear and try to pit
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one group against another. when you hear all this talk about economic miracles. remember who started it. they run things into the ground and we come back to clean it up. brian: no doubt he cleaned up a economy struggling and but he got tarp and huge stimulus, which was $800 billion to spend. he promised shovel-ready jobs. that never really happened. when the country was supposed to be out of recession, growing three to 4%, we never grew more than 2%. the stimulus passed in the first month because of the crisis that his chief of staff should never go to waste. steve: he said remember who started the economic recovery. there are people in the president's administration, however, would say, hey, you're forgetting we're the ones who are cutting regulations and we're the ones who cut your taxes. that has a lot to do with it.
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ainsley: remind you how time flies. you look at him standing up there on stage, that was two years ago when he was our president. you see donald trump and everyone out there at the rally supporting him in houston, this is our president now. so obama, we haven't seen president obama in a long time. brian: let's get this straight, president obama for six years blamed george bub are to the economy. then after two years he took credit for it. now he is taking credit for donald trump's first two years. where is the president obama, i take responsibility for what i have? steve: stay tuned. meantime, 8:07. jillian: fox news alert. the migrant caravan we've been talking about, growing a mile long as it heads straight for southern border. brian: dealing with criminals that broke the law. steve: griff jenkins is on the border. people will sigh video you took
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of somebody trying to cross the united states illegally. reporter: already the overwhelmed border, helicopter above me searching for illegal crossings. it is happening a lot. we're there when one happened. we spoke to the people illegally crossed. watch. we're witnessing one of the crossings because they're coming right now. sir? you tried to cross into america illegally? where are you going? what we're witnessing now is clearly a family being brought over by that smuggler that was paddling in a raft, gone back over there. you see on the bank over here, even more family members, women and children waiting to be brought over. can you tell me you came illegally? >> the situation of honduras. reporter: you're from honduras? >> yes. reporter: what are the conditions there? >> you cannot have work in
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there. the criminals as you will, get your money. reporter: not all women and children though. in the last 48 hours, a man wanted for murder in south carolina arrested here as well as a man belonging to the 18th street violent gang. a constant reminder of problem, guys. you can't see because it is dark. helicopter working above us trying to get illegal crossings. we're going up in a helicopter to bring that to you tomorrow. brian: griff, doing incredible job, appreciate the perspective. steve: here is the perspective for but the growth of the caravan. it actually started in honduras. there were 160 people, when they crossed the guatemala border, picked up to 1600. next stop 2000. before you knew it by the end of the weekend, 7200, distance to
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mcallen, texas, a distance of 1000 miles. they are suggesting it take as month to get to the united states. ainsley: look at the map. see guatemala is, down there, they're at where bought -- guatemala and mexico meet. that is long hike and they're growing. brian: ainsley, that's it, not as if people fall out. they seem to be gaining momentum. how can anyone look at this, look the way "new york times" look at this, think it is manufactured event. this is something that should concern every american. if you told me one issue the democrats and republicans could rally beyond, beyond the saudi arabian catastrophe, killing of an american resident, didn't surprise me democrats and republicans are working together on that. surprises me democrats are not just as alarmed, if you let this 7,000, be solve this thou thousand person coming, you will get 25,000. tell me a scenario works for any
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country to allow people to stream in and leave your immigration program in tatters. steve: immigration is not good issue for democrats. democrats called for abolishment of i.c.e. they embrace sanctuary cities. instead of talking about the sanctuary cities and caravan, they want to talk about health care. ainsley: in the group some are mothers and children and some are dangerous criminals and some interviewed by "the washington post," we deported so many times in the united states and this is our opportunity to get back in. brian: just because you're a woman and child doesn't mean you have automatic right to our country. ainsley: you have to do it right. not fair for the women and children paying taxes. steve: right way to vet everybody into the country. do they have and a asylum claim? we'll find out. jillian joins us. busy morning. jillian: brand new information. reporting of body parts of jamal
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khashoggi have been found in the garden of the saudi counsel general. hours after president erdogan demanded action from the saudis. >> and now our expectation from them going forward is that all those responsible from the highest degree, highest level to the lowest level will be highlighted, will be brought to justice. jillian: in a speech to the turkish parliament erdogan vowed a vigilant investigation what he called a savage murder. they're looking to local conspirators. cia head gina haskell is flown to turkey. police discovering marie cuna's body nearing the resort. she went misses last week. 61-year-old is a lawyer on long
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island, new york. officials have not released how she died. john bolton will meet with president putin in moscow. they're expected to talk about president trump's decision to pull out of the nuclear arms treaty. president ronald reagan and president gorbachev signed the treaty in 1987 preventing russia and u.s. from building and testing cruise missiles. steve: john bolton has a good day. ainsley: congresswoman mia love is being targeted in a smear campaign over campaign contributions even though she was clear of any wrongdoing. she joins us live next. steve: plus the mooch, anthony scaramucci joins us live. has a new book. you don't want to miss it. the book is great. ♪
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but you'd be a fool to believe them. you see talk doesn't get things done. building does. building like we have for the last 115 years. and building for the next century. building cars, new technology, and transforming cities. [engine accelerating] so let the other guys keep dreaming about the future. we'll be the ones building it. ♪
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♪ steve: alliance for a better utah filed an fec complaint against congresswoman mia love last month accusing her of accepting over a million dollars in illegal campaign contributions. brian: the fec cleared mia love saying the campaign can keep the money.
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steve: ben mcadams says this is still an open matter. brian: really? is that possible? congresswoman mia love who has the seat and wants to keep that seat. congressman, why was this a issue to begin with? you think there is a bigger story than just you? >> right. so there was an alliance for better utah is a group that pretends that they are a watchdog for utah but they're actually a pitbull for the liberal left and what we found out we discovered that not only are there campaign donations over and over again, the chairman donated $5000 to mcadams. his wife was appointed to the planning commission. they have tom love who is communications director, did all of the campaign commercials for him. and they even ran fund-raisers for him. so they're completely connected. they coordinated with the national democrat party. and they, i say, it is like putting in a false police report
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that really should, they should be held accountable for. steve: they complained to the fec. the fec looked into it, cleared you two weeks before the midterms. but they put out a particular statement on the fe crept findings. saying the email representative love's campaign received today does not change anything. the status of our complaint today is the same as it was yesterday and same as it has been since we received official notice of receipt via letter from the fec last week. fec says you're off the hook. your opponent says you're not which is not surprising. >> i don't think it can be any clearer, we require no corrective action from friends of mia love. that is the fec that actually says that. this is, what happened is this is absolutely devastating for the mcadams campaign because they were banking on this they don't have any policies. they don't have any solutions for anything. this is character assassination and they found out that he
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actually, not just lied, but he coordinated this lie and i am afraid this is happening throughout the nation. this character assassination. we saw it with kavanaugh and ford. they took these two people's lives and destroyed them completely for political gain. it is really upsetting. brian: the polls say you're about tied. congresswoman you're a special threat to democrats many feel, a black woman who chooses to be successful conservative republican that is something democrats fear. >> you know, i'm here and i believe that we are going to continue to be here. and what we need to do, i'm telling everybody out there, that the way that we fight against this type of character assassination, is to say we're going to reject it, going to the polls. we will not allow democrats to beat us at the polls. steve: we reached out to the democrat in the race, ben mcadams for interview as well. they declined.
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>> of course. steve: thank you for joining us today. brian: mia love. steve: migrant caravan is quickly becoming a top issue in the my terms. are democrats making mistake ignoring voter concerns about border security? a debate is next. sometimes, the pressures of today's world can make it tough to take care of yourself. but nature's bounty has innovative ways to help you maintain balance and help keep you active and well-rested. because hey, tomorrow's coming up fast. nature's bounty. because you're better off healthy.
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♪ steve: 8:24 in new york city. quick headlines. fbi releasing several notes from the boston marathon bomber. they were written during his initial interrogation five years ago. one of them defended the attack. it reads, i did what was necessary. lawyers appealing the case made the notes public. embattled minnesota congressman keith ellison is trailing in the polls. he is down seven points to his
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challenger, doug werdlow for minnesota governor. he faces accusations of abuse from an ex-girlfriend. >> no this immigrant made national headlines after being detained for delivering pizza to a army base. he is dow in court for allegedly attacks his wife. police on long island in new york, say pushed and slapped her in their home and prevented her from dialing 911. ainsley, that is some of the news. ainsley: thank you, steve. president trump making it clear as caravan of migrants is edging closer and closer to the u.s. border. >> you know how the caravan started in? i think the democrats have something to do with it. the democrats don't care what their extremist immigration agenda will do to your neighborhoods. they don't care that the mass illegal immigration will totally bankrupt our country.
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ainsley: well the headlines this morning are claiming that democrats are struggling when it comes to addressing these claims, basically staying silent. here to debate it rnc spokesperson, kayleigh mcenany and fox news contributor, jessica tarlov. jessica, start with you, are democrats dismissing issue? >> they're not dismissing it but calling it humanitarian crisis. president is a telling a number of lies what is going on. the first of all, 6, 7,000 people, mostly women and children trying to escape honduras and gaut maul for humanitarian crisis reasons. going 23 miles away, would come to mid-december. he need this as election issue. he doesn't want to talk about the murder of jamal khashoggi. i have no idea why he doesn't talk about the economy where he is leading in the polls. right now democrats are favored on issue of immigration by four points. gop is fear-mongering, going back to their greatest hits from
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2016 when he called mexicans criminals and rapists. lying about who is in there. says middle-easterners are part of this caravan. no evidence that. he wants to think of ms-13 members. no evidence of that. just to rile up his base and go back to his nationalist roots which is comfortable calling himself. ainsley: kayleigh, humanitarian crisis, no evidence of ms-13? >> oh, i don't agree with that at all. make mo mistakes democrats do not care about this why a few months ago, they were talking about abolishing i.c.e. at that point where we saw this become a republican issue, this turned to our side of the aisle in our polling. look this is not just a humanitarian crisis. yes, that is an element of illegal immigration and we have a process for that. it is called asylum. you go to port of entry, there you can make your climb. however what is being ignored entirely by the left many of these folks many coming over, are ms-13, are gang members,. >> where is evidence? >> you have ever heard of
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operation matador? 500 ms-13 gang members in new york. of those 99 came through as unaccompanied mine norse. 67 got defacto amnesty through the juvenile immigrant program. that inexcusable, left doesn't care about it. ainsley: there is evidence according to "the washington post." he is 29 years old. he has been deported six times, broken the law. last time he was here five months ago from birmingham. he said this is his chance. how it is. they catch you and you try just to get back in. another guy in the group had been deported too. he said when i heard about the caravan i knew this was my chance. >> so you have got two guys there. i'm sure a few more have been deported. i'm not sure exactly what second quarterness at thats are. ainsley: 7,000. i'm sure there are more than a few. >> i'm sure there are. i'm sure mexico has been incredibly vigilant and harsh with migrant populations come there on the guatemalan border. that is what is going on. they have been merciless turning
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people around. president is trying to stoke fierce. he is calling a national emergency, like he did when opioid crisis, sending troops to chicago. want people to live in fear. think of people a strong man that will protect us. he will not. from a humanitarian crisis. ainsley: yeahs can all it takes is one criminal. ask kate steinle's parents. ask the angel mom. if she did it legal way and illegal killed her son. >> plenty of americans walking into schools today with guns they shouldn't have and shooting children. >> you can't ignore it. ainsley: let's let kayleigh talk. >> you can't ignore the facts. i sat across one of the mothers. her son would be here today if the law was enforced. not isolated individuals a few individuals affected by illegal immigrant crime. 48,000 assault offenses by illegal immigrant population.
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1800 homicides. it might not mean something to someone not affected by it, i've seen her tears, mean as heck of a lot if her child would be here if laws were enforced. abolish ice. >> natural born citizens this president wants a fear election the because he can't compete on policy issues. ainsley: weigh in on this please, you guys at home. let us know what you think for foxnews.com. thanks so much, ladies. pete is having "breakfast with friends" in the state of texas after president trump's big rally in houston. we'll check in with him next. anthony scaramucci knows effect of those rallies. he is in our studio. hey, anthony, come on up. ♪ molly: my np spends a lot of time
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♪ >> this will be the election of the caravan, kavanaugh, law and order, tax cuts, and common sense. the choice in november could not be more clear. democrats produce mobs. republicans produce jobs. [cheering] right? this election you can send a message to the radical democrats, don't mess with texas steve: don't mess with anthony scaramucci. he was the president's communications director for 11 days. >> yeah. brian: on his resume'. no fake news at fox news. that is the right number. >> he has written fantastic, very funny memoir, recount of the trump administration. trump the blue-collar president. mr. scaramucci joins us live. ainsley: last time i saw you were in your kitchen cooking
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with your wife as far as his book segment of the we had a video. your house so so beautiful. congratulations. >> the only one in the family knows how to cook is my wife. steve doocy outed me to america i don't know how to skin a carrot. brian: you made fake news that cast controversial. you weathered that story. >> i weathered. you have to be like mayhem in the allstate commercial going into politics. the car crash, you can complain and go to the hospital and get up, dust yourself up. i dusted myself off. brian: you made my life easier, people always ask don't know president trump, i said, why is a billionaire relating to blue-collar people more than billionaires? another billionaires don't really like him that much. he is different than them. you break it down in the book. go back to your family and his family. can you do it now? >> i talk about fred trump. how his rise, that cocontemporaneous to my dad's
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story. they're both american stories and both american arcs, seeking american dream. i talk about the carwana family, a good friend of ours, fred trump, and very young donald j. trump are meeting with people to collect rent. the family, the husband lost his job. the fred trump looks in front of donald j. trump, fine, we'll revisit this in a month or so i'm confident you will get another job. you are a straight-up job. these are stories about the president people wouldn't tell, in terms of his compassion, who he is as a guy, in the end of the day he feels for the people. this is a guy that can walk a construction site, recognize someone with a lunch pail, coming into the site, working eight, possibly 10 hour day, getting hourly wage, being member of union and helping -- ainsley: he is relatable. >> he is relatable. ainsley: started with a million dollars, became a billionaire? >> whatever he started with is
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the not really the thing. it was a bill any in a tower adjacent to the tiffany store that saw what was going on in my neighborhood, ainsley. i write about that i'm very honest about it. i went to the fancy pants schools in boston. went to goldman sachs. built two hedge funds. i started to get into these concentric circles of bias, confirmed biases, talking to wealthy people about their wealthy life experience. it wasn't -- until i got on the campaign with the president. went to places like albuquerque, new mexico, saw aspirational family i grew up in was becoming a desperational working class family. brian: middle class was disappearing. manufacturing leaving the country. >> not whiteeth know nationalism, just economic desperation. why are you here in the rally? president trump is bringing back jobs to my neighborhood. what the new mexico is literally
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new mexico. that i try to relate that in the book. at end of the day the president has a touch for this stuff, very unique and instinct all. steve: the book is terrific. you're a very good writer. after you were escorted out of the white house, seen with your wonderful mother marie, she is at stoop of your boyhood home, going, essentially, to reporters, get off my lawn claim. >> i said mom, please, got me trouble in the white house. nobody else curses in the white house. maybe sure everybody knows that. ainsley: what do you think about the blue wave? you have democrats, tom perez, chairman of the dnc, bernie sanders we're not calling it a blue wave, because we don't think that smart. it is way close. some states are purple. >> the president is genius, moving around the country, making the bet he can get the voter participation up. what classically happened, ainsley the president is hunkered in by the rose garden, oval office, people are
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generally happy because he is in power. people in his party and other people come out and vote. angry voters vote more than complacent voters. the president is out there trying to rally his base, reminding them how important it is to get out there and vote so they can protect the less of deregulation, protect the legislation and obviously look for forward progress after the midterms. steve: sure. brian: you talk about the clash you had in the white house. you talk about a clash with chief of staff general kelly. story yesterday, general kelly grabbing corey lewandoski by the collar, things got heated between them. do you believe that story took place? >> of course the story took place. here is the thing. you know, general kelly fired you so you have a personal animosity. steve: axe to grind. >> i don't have personal animosity for general kelly. i've been fired before. i write about that in the book. general kelly is the second person that fired me. he won't be the last person because i'm a little bit after renegade. having said that i think he is ill-suited for the job.
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i'm being honest. i run successful companies. i know how to evaluate talent. i may not be the best communications director. i know how to evaluate talent. you need a less militant style in a organization. you can't be grabbing people by the color. cursing off the national security advisor. brian: you think it happened? >> i'm confident it happened. i know the players involved. i am very confident. let's not lie about it. ainsley: sean spicer wrote about you. started at book beginning to talk about you, at the end he resigned immediately because you were hired. he liked you as a person, didn't think you were right for the job. >> sean is entitled to a person. i thought he was a liar, liar spice from the spice girls. every spice girl has a nickname. i didn't like the way he handled about me. told lies about me to the press. i was originally supposed to be the lpl director. they withheld the press release even though i had offer and acceptance.
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him and rice tried to prevent me from getting job. that is the washington shenanigans american people absolutely hate. i don't dislike sean personally. he is entitled to his valuation of me. he is right in the following respect i didn't have comes, washington operative lying experience. okay? steve: that was your problem. >> that was my problem. steve: the book is called, "trump, the blue-collar president." not openly a book. he put out online interpretive dance. >> little bit of a interpretive dance. neck hanging at the end was frustrating. steve: thank you very, anthony. congratulations. brian: talk to you on radio. steve: president trump promise promising a new 10% tax cut for middle class. we'll talk to larry kudlow about details if he has got some coming up. brian: pete hegseth has friends so he can eat for free.
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♪ jillian: hope you're having a good morning. some quick headlines. peta waging a new war on milk, launching #ditchdairy campaign. that milk is a symbol used by white supremacists to mock minorities with lactose intolerance. cdc is warning against taking animals trick-or-treating this year because of salmonella scare. the outbreak reaching 29 states. agency says can get infection handling live bird. if you have a president chicken you take trick-or-treating i would love to hear about it. steve: i didn't know that was a thing. brian: pete hegseth is in texas at the house of pies in houston. the sun is up and people are out
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reporter: sun is up, people are out and many have opinions. some rsvped, didn't go, but watched rally of president trump. have a lot of opinions like he does. point of breakfast with friends is to listen to their opinions, not the pundits. you watched the rally. here we are two weeks from the midterms. your reaction? >> that was great. keeping what our president does. we were so excited. we tried to go to the rally, couldn't, but did one better. before the rally last night we had already voted. pete: instead of attending you voted? >> that is more important we voted straight republican ticket. pete: so passionate about one issue happened recently. >> kavanaugh. kavanaugh. it was disgraceful and disrespectful, not only kavanaugh and his family, the president, all the rest of us. the whole country was watching. it saddened me to watch how he was treated. pete: has a lot of people fired up. well-said. thank you very much. sir, you're a small business
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owner what are you most passionate about? >> i think we need to protect our borders, language culture and border needs to be built. no alternative to the wall. we need to build the wall. pete: well-said. mia, thank you for being here. >> thank you. pete: you came from philippines you and your family, came here illegally. that is passionate for you. >> that is a huge deal for me. everyone should come to the united states through the correct process, versus coming through however they want to come. we don't know who is coming through the border. we have to make sure people coming through are not any criminals, you know. we want to make sure we're going to be safe. pete: you mentioned kids in the process. >> yeah. that hurts my heart when i see kids out there, and they're being dragged through there to make sure that they can come through with those kids. a lot of times we don't know if those kids are really the kids. pete: president has gotten criticism. you see first-hand human
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trafficking is problem here? >> absolutely. we're here at the border. this is one of the areas that human trafficking occurs. we have to make sure people are not trying to use the kid for that. pete: expose you for one thing. you haven't voted in the past. you are voting now. why are you voting choosing now? >> i'm voting for first time ever because i really love this country and i don't want it to go down the drain like looks like it is headed there if we don't vote. if we don't seat for the republicans it is not going in the right direction. pete: appreciate your passion very much. i'm being told we have to wrap it. two folks i want to talk to. anna, we'll wrap it right now. three special people for me. this is melik, omar, latham. i served with omar and his family in iraq. i have to end the segment. send it pack to you new york for me? >> back to you nice in new york. ainsley: that is awesome. thank you for your service. brian: there is omar. larry kudlow next. that is what he looks like.
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♪ brian: all right, president trump promising a new round of tax cuts aimed at middle class ahead of the midterms. here to break down what it means for your wallet, head of white house national economic council, larry kudlow. we were surprised to hear about this couple weeks ago. what can we expect? >> well it is in the planning stage. we've had tax cuts, very effective help for the middle class. their tax liabilities is down about $2,000 for a family of four. we also have wage increases, a family of four, probably $4,000. maybe higher, over a period of time, in wage increases. so, the president would like to go for more. he is a tax cutter. that is a big difference from
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his predecessor who was a tax-hiker and we're going to try to work out some of the details on his proposal for a 10% middle class tax cut. steve: okay, here is one of the details. while the president announced it last night in houston, congress is not in session. so are you suggesting that congress will be called back? they will deal with it after the election? what is the status of that? >> i think the general point of view is of at election, but i think the president wants to message this policy ahead of the election. it is a pro-growth policy and you know, across the board, this economy is really humming. as i have said many times, american workers, blue collars, white collars, entrepreneurs are just crushing it, absolutely crushing it. we're the hottest economy in the world. you know what? want to compare this economy today with the economy of two or three years ago, are you better off today, i believe you are
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overwhelmingly better off today. brian: let's hear president obama say that. >> when you hear all this talk about economic miracles right now remember who started it. they run things into the ground and we have to come back and clean things up. ainsley: larry, he is taking credit for our economy. is he right or is he wrong? >> i don't think he is right with all respect to former president obama. look it, under his stewardship the so-called recovery was, i don't know, 2% average per year, which is really the worst since the, i believe since the depression. and, already, we have beaten our critics, including obama's staff people. we're running an economy three to 4% economic growth. the whole thing here, president trump, cut tax rates on small businesses and corporations and individuals. he wants to do some more. that is a huge change from president obama. president trump is, you know, rolled back onerous regulations
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and what you're seeing now is a tremendous increase in men and women who own and operate their own small businesses. president has stopped the war against success. stopped the war against emergency. stop the war against fossil fuels. he is rewarding success. last point, look at confidence metric. obama had nothing like that, with all due respect, again. i don't want to get tied up in personal attacks. just saying, almost from the day of the election, consumer sentiment and small business confidence has soared. it had been falling. it's a v recovery and it continues. that is the most amazing thing. it continues. brian: the word is the president will not have a substantive talk with the president of china. he says they're not ready yet to talk. what does he mean? >> well, look, we're in the planning stage for that too, and i don't know what the agenda is going to be. a lot of people are working behind the scenes here to try to
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figure that out. it could be important or it may be not. first time they have met in quite some time. that will be in argentina, g20, in a month or so it is not going to be detailed trade discussion, and of course there are lots of other issues. secretary pompeo, ambassador bolton will run that down for you. but, yeah, they have a whole menu of issues not least of which is north korea. it is early to speculate on how that is going to go. my general view better to talk not to talk. but if it is not substantive, significant, maybe not. steve: larry kudlow, joining from us the north lawn. larry, prediction on the election two weeks from today? >> [laughter]. would you like me to forecast interest rates, stock market? brian: don't do politics. larry kudlow thanks so much. >> i will say, i will say this, the biggest threat, i think i worry about the most is a change in the house with which will overturn the tax cuts and
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regulatory reduction. steve: all right. >> my biggest worry. steve: larry kudlow, thank you very much. ♪ we're gonna do what they say can't be done ♪ ♪ we've got a long way to go and a short time to get there ♪ ♪ i'm east bound, just watch ol' bandit run ♪ ♪ whatever party you've got going in the back, we've got the business up front. ♪ [clang]
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>> big congratulations to "fox & friends" first. they welcome their son greyson john moore to the world yesterday. mom and baby are doing great. congratulations. >> bill: well done. good morning, everybody. breaking news on the disappearance of this columnist. breaking at the moment where sky news reports body parts have been found in istanbul. the network saying the remains were discovered in the garden of the saudi consul general's home. more on this breaking news as we get it from the state department. another alert. 14 days from mid-terms. two weeks from today is the big vote as the growing caravan continues its course toward the u.s. it's tuesday and we're jam-packed. i'm bill hemmer live in new york. >> sandra: i'm sandra smith.

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